As you’re waiting for the end of the workday to roll around, you might watch this video of author Malcolm Gladwell’s talk at the Toronto Public Library’s Appel Salon. Gladwell lays out his analysis of modern-day entrepreneurs as amoral people — and why he thinks Bill Gates will be remembered and Steve Jobs will be forgotten.

His argument centers around Bill Gates as an anomaly in the entrepreneurial world due to his philanthropic work.

I know, I know. People who live in glass houses and bloggers who occasionally make errors — we’re not supposed to spend a lot of time pointing and laughing. But this goof from the BBC is pretty funny.

During a report on unrest in Syria, the television network displayed what they thought was the insignia for the United Nation’s Security Council. Except it was actually the logo of the fictional United Nations Space Command from the Halo video games.

Since launching in October 2010, Instagram has rapidly grown to be the darling of social photography, outgrowing the slowly dying Flickr and outpacing the growth of Facebook. While it took Facebook 3 …

When was the last time you talked to a person face to face? A study out of the UK reports that three percent of adults are categorized as “digitally dominant” and go for long stretches of time without …

Microsoft Excel designer Karen X Cheng let her coworkers know she was leaving the company with this rewrite of “American Pie” posted on YouTube. There are a few references only a Microsoftie would get, but it’s worth watching. …

Today is just full of surprises. First, I find out that new Apple products have a distinct smell. (Still puzzling over that one.) And simultaneously, I discover that a group of artists called Greatest Hits have bottled that smell in the name of art.

An art exhibition in Melbourne, Australia will debut the fragrance, designed by a company called Air Aroma. Here’s how the company describes the scent.